Germanic Healing Knowledge


🌿 Abdominal Wall Issues – Germanic Healing Knowledge (GHK) Perspective

Based on Björn Eybl’s The Psychic Roots of Disease (pp. 259–262) and Dr. Hamer’s Five Biological Laws.


đź§  Biological Context

The abdominal wall, along with the peritoneum and navel, belongs to the mesodermal germ layer, controlled by the cerebral medulla and partly by the motor cortex.

It protects the abdominal organs and helps maintain body posture and pressure balance.


⚡ Conflict Theme

Self-Esteem Conflict:
“I’m under too much pressure.”
“I have to carry too much.”
“Everything feels like a burden.”
“I can’t withstand this pressure anymore.”

In children, this often appears as a substitution conflict — the child mirrors a parent’s stress or pressure unconsciously.


🔄 Conflict-Active Phase

  • There is unnoticed cell depletion in the tendon sheets and connective tissue of the abdominal wall.
  • The wall becomes weaker or thinner, making it easier for pressure from inside (coughing, lifting, straining, gas buildup) to push tissue outward.
  • Over time, this may lead to a hernial opening or abdominal wall hernia.

đź’§ Healing Phase (After Conflict Resolution)

When the person no longer feels under pressure or burdened:

  • Repair begins — tissue thickens and strengthens.
  • This is the healing phase.
  • If the area is rested and supported, complete recovery is possible within a few months.
  • If the hernia persists, surgery may be needed.

⚙️ Biological Purpose

To strengthen the abdominal wall so the person can better withstand pressure — a protective adaptation of the body.


🧩 Typical Examples (from Björn Eybl’s archives)

  • A man constantly working under high expectations, feeling he must “hold everything together,” develops an inguinal hernia.
  • A child develops a small umbilical hernia when the mother is overwhelmed and “under pressure.” The child subconsciously mirrors her emotional state.
  • A manual laborer repeatedly lifts heavy objects while feeling unappreciated — “no one helps me carry the load.” A hernia appears days later.

đź’¬ Guiding Questions

  • When did the hernia first appear?
  • What pressure or load was I under just before that?
  • Did I feel unsupported, overburdened, or pushed too far?
  • Do similar issues run in the family (e.g., “We always have to work hard”)?
  • When did everything start feeling heavy or difficult?

🌱 Therapeutic Support (Eybl’s guidance)

  • Awareness: Recognize and release the inner feeling of “pressure.”
  • Affirmation: “I let go — everything flows easily now.”
  • Physical support: Improve posture, core strength, and breathing.
  • Natural remedies: Comfrey or Sanicle (internally and externally) to support tissue healing.
  • Lifestyle: Avoid gas-forming foods and straining; wear a supportive belt during recovery if needed.
  • If needed: Surgical repair — ideally after the conflict has been emotionally resolved.

đź’ˇ Core Message

“Abdominal wall weakness or hernia is not random.
It’s the body’s way of showing that we’ve been under too much pressure — and are now ready to rebuild strength.”


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